Difference between revisions of "Kyrgyz phrasal verbs"

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m (V1 + V2 with V2's valency)
(N + V)
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== N + V ==
 
== N + V ==
  
 +
=== N with possessive morphology ===
 +
 +
==== N is subject ====
 
* башты/башымды/жүрөктү/жүрөгүмдү айлант-
 
* башты/башымды/жүрөктү/жүрөгүмдү айлант-
  
 +
==== N is object ====
 
* ичим айлан
 
* ичим айлан
 +
 +
==== N is in other cases ====
 +
* турмушка чык
 +
 +
 +
=== N without possessive morphology ===
  
 
== Other ==
 
== Other ==
  
 
* кус+ку
 
* кус+ку

Revision as of 01:06, 22 December 2011

V + V

There are many cases in Kyrgyz where two (or more) verbs occur in a sequence. Usually this is in combinations where there's a sequence of events (each one represented by a verb) or additional aspectual or mood information being added to an event (where a second verb is an auxiliary conveying that aspectual/mood information).

V + V as a single verb

There are, however, a few V + V combinations which can be interpreted (and certainly translated) as if they are behaving as a single verb.

  • алып кел- < ал- ‘take’ + кел- ‘come’ = bring
  • алып бар- < ал- ‘take’ + бар- ‘go (+dest)’ = take / bring (over)
  • алып кет- < ал- ‘take’ + кет- ‘leave’ = take away
  • алып жүр- < ал- ‘take’ + жүр- ‘go’ = carry (in some contexts)

Some of these have abbreviated forms in speech:¹

  • апкел- = алып кел-
  • апар- = алып бар-

¹ In Kazakh, the forms әкел-, апар-, and әкет- are the standard written forms of these words, and only in very high registers are they written as two separate verbs.

V1 + V2 with V2's valency

In most instances of V1 + V2 (+ V3, etc.), the main verb is V1 and the valency of the compound verb is that of V1. However, in some [rather rare] scenarios, V2 is treated as the main verb and the valency of the compound verb is that of V2.

FIXME: example

N + V

N with possessive morphology

N is subject

  • башты/башымды/жүрөктү/жүрөгүмдү айлант-

N is object

  • ичим айлан

N is in other cases

  • турмушка чык


N without possessive morphology

Other

  • кус+ку